How to Make Flavored Butter 4 Easy Recipes (2024)

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It’s pretty hard to make real butter any better, but seriously, I may never look at butter the same after trying out these flavored butters. Perfect for a holiday treat, to make every day food a little more special, and making your foodie friends cheer. Plus, I get to use my Mason jars, which always makes me happy.

How to Make Flavored Butter 4 Easy Recipes (1)

Here are 4 flavored butter recipes that whip up in literally a minute or less. I know, that’s my kind of cooking when I’m busy.

If you missed any of the previous fun posts in ourHomemade Christmas Series go hereto get caught up and be sure to sign up to get the rest of the tutorials and early bird supply lists delivered straight to your inbox once a week.

Today’s post is by Shaunta and I could tell we were going to be good friends, I mean, how can we not bond over aprons and butter?

Real butter is such a treat, isn’t it? It’s luxurious, without being too expensive. There’s just something about it that makes ordinary food special. (Melissa here: Pass me the buttah! These were such a hit, I included them in my 2021 holiday craft party.)

Butter is also super simple to add flavor to and make even more special. Little 4 ounce mason jarsfull of the flavored butter you used to make a holiday meal for friends or family makes a great gift to send home with your guests.

Really, just about any flavor combination you can come up with can be worked into softened butter. I made Lime Chili Butter, Peach Cinnamon Brown Sugar Butter, and Maple Walnut Butter and they all turned out spectacular. (Melissa-I made the Gingerbread Butter and am in love)

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • What you’ll need:
  • Ingredients:+
    • For the Lime Chili Butter:
    • For the Peach Cinnamon Brown Sugar Butter:
    • For the Maple Walnut Butter:
    • For the Gingerbread Butter:
  • Basic Instructions
  • Lime Chili Butter
  • Peach Cinnamon Brown Sugar Butter
  • Maple Walnut Butter
  • Gingerbread Butter

What you’ll need:

A hand mixer or stand mixer
A bowl
A food processor

Ingredients:

Real butter (each recipe is for one stick)4

For the Lime Chili Butter:

A lime
Chili powder

For the Peach Cinnamon Brown Sugar Butter:

Frozen peaches
Cinnamon
Brown sugar

For the Maple Walnut Butter:

Maple syrup (real is best, but pancake syrup works)
Chopped walnuts

For the Gingerbread Butter:

Molasses
Nutmeg
Cinnamon
Ginger

Basic Instructions

For any flavored butter you’d like to try, start with room temperature, softened butter.

Whip the butter on with a hand mixer on medium for about two minutes. You want it to be soft and light.

Blend in ingredients on low, or stir them in with a spoon.

You can either pack the butter into a 4 ounce jar or line a square container with wax paper and mold the butter. If you chose to mold the butter, wrap it in clean waxed paper and decorate with paper or a ribbon.

A stick of butter is four ounces, so if you add something more substantial than spices, you’re going to have too much butter for a 4 ounce jar. Darn. You’re going to have to eat the rest yourself!

Lime Chili Butter

Lime Chili Butter is really good on corn or any vegetable you’re serving that you’d like to give a Latin flair to. It’s also great on cornbread.

You taste the lime first and then the chili comes up with an awesome kick at the end. Yum.

Add the zest and juice of half a lime and a teaspoon of chili powder for each stick of butter. Use your mixer on low to distribute everything. Taste and adjust the chili powder. I wanted mine spicy, so I added about two teaspoons for a stick of butter.

Peach Cinnamon Brown Sugar Butter

I’m definitely making this again for Christmas morning. If you have overnight guests for the holidays, serve this with toast and they will be so impressed with you.

This butter is fantastic on a baked sweet potato, too.

For each stick of butter you’re going to use 1/8 cup of frozen peaches, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, and 2 Tablespoons brown sugar.

Let your peaches defrost and pat them dry. Then whir them in your food processor until they’re chopped up very fine. Mix the cinnamon and brown sugar into the whipped butter, then stir in the peaches.

This is one where you’re going to have extra if you use a four ounce jar. Doubling this recipe would fill three jars.

Maple Walnut Butter

You have to make this one, just so you can see how good it smells. Like the holidays in a jar. This is good on just about everything—bread, potatoes, pancakes . . . Mmmm.

For each stick of butter, you’ll use 1/8 of a cup of ground walnuts (you’ll start with about 1/4 cup of chopped walnuts) and two Tablespoons of maple syrup. Obviously, real maple syrup is best (especially for a gift), but pancake syrup works, too.

Use your food processor to grind up walnuts until you have a quarter cup. Mix the syrup into your whipped butter with your hand mixer, then stir the nuts in with a spoon.

This is another one where you’ll have left overs if you put it into a four ounce jar. Doubling this recipe would fill three jars.

Melissa here~ After salivating over all these flavored butter recipes, I had to make a butter using molasses.

Gingerbread Butter

This is the thing of Christmas dreams.

Place one stick of butter in a bowl (I used my stand mixer with whip attachment). Add 2 Tablespoons molasses, 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon, 1/4 teaspoon ginger, and 1/4 teaspoon nutmeg. Whip until well blended. Spread onto toast and stop after two pieces… if you can.

How to Make Flavored Butter 4 Easy Recipes (2)

This would be delightful on pancakes or waffles. It also tastes pretty good eaten straight off the spoon. Yes, I totally did that.

How to Make Flavored Butter 4 Easy Recipes (3)

Shaunta is a writer and a managing editor for a small hybrid press. She lives in Reno with three amazing kids, one adorable husband, an old man cat, and a sweet rescue dog. She blogs atwww.goingreno.comabout personal finance, organization, and wellness for people like her: right-brained, creative, and easily confused by NASA-level plans for getting her life together.

How to Make Flavored Butter 4 Easy Recipes (2024)

FAQs

How to make butter flavoring? ›

Originally Answered: How do you make your own butter extract or flavoring at home? Combine 1/3 cup of butter and one cup of vodka in a saucepan. Melt them together over low heat to ensure the alcohol won't evaporate. Once it's fully combined, let it sit at room temperature for 5 hours.

How to make butter taste better? ›

All you need are 2 ingredients: butter and milk. Then add honey, herbs, spices, zest or garlic to take the flavor up an extra notch!

How long does homemade flavored butter last? ›

How to store flavored butter. You can choose to either use the butter as soon as you've made it or you can roll it in paper or plastic wrap and store it up to two weeks in the fridge.

What can I use for butter flavoring? ›

What Is Butter Flavoring Substitute
  • Coconut oil is a versatile and popular substitute for butter flavoring in both cooking and baking. ...
  • Olive oil is another excellent substitute for butter flavoring, especially in savory dishes.
Mar 4, 2024

What gives butter Flavour? ›

Diacetyl is a naturally occurring substance that gives butter its characteristic flavor and aroma, and is often a component of artificial flavoring formulations. Acetoin, a closely related chemical, also occurs naturally and is an ingredient in many flavoring formulations, perfumes and essences.

Why does my butter taste bad? ›

The rep noted that it “usually indicates the fats are beginning to turn rancid.” Rancid butter has an unmistakable off flavor that you may have encountered tasting old oil, old nuts or seeds, or any other food with a high-fat content that is long past its prime.

Is homemade butter tastier? ›

Flavor: Homemade butter is striking: It tastes unbelievably fresh. I tested my first batch of homemade butter against my favorite supermarket brand, and the difference was clear: Freshly made butter tastes FRESH, unlike butter that's sat at the supermarket for a while.

Does homemade butter go bad? ›

Homemade butter's shelf life depends on how thoroughly you extract the buttermilk. If a substantial amount of buttermilk remains, it will sour within a week, otherwise homemade butter can keep for up to 2-3 weeks in the fridge.

Does butter flavoring go bad? ›

We looked at the storage recommendations from several flavoring manufacturers and they say that extracts tend to have a shelf life of 6 months to 1 year.

Can you freeze flavored butter? ›

Compound butter can also be called 'herb butter' or in French, 'beurre compose'. It is a great butter to keep in the fridge or freezer.

How to give butter as a gift? ›

Decorate or wrap the butter for gift giving but be sure to keep it chilled or even freeze it before you deliver the gift.

What is the difference between butter flavoring and butter extract? ›

Butter extract is created by separating proteins and flavors from whole butter, while butter flavoring isolates specific compounds like diacetyl. Butter extract comes from milk ingredients and is not vegan, while butter flavoring can be vegan depending on the manufacturing process.

Can you make butter extract from scratch? ›

Step-By-Step Guide to Making Butter Extract at Home. You will need: ½ cup of butter (unsalted) 1 cup of alcohol: I used 80-proof vodka.

Can you use butter extract instead of butter flavoring? ›

The Butter EXTRACT enhances or adds some butter flavor in recipes. It is not a replacement for butter in a recipe. It is only a flavoring, not an 'ingredient', just like Vanilla Extract or any other EXTRACT is a flavoring.

How to make butter extract without alcohol? ›

To make your non-alcoholic extracts, just substitute the alcohol called for in any extract recipe with three parts food-grade liquid glycerin and one part water. Stir the two ingredients together until well combined. Then, proceed with the recipe as usual.

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